(The item "Wal-Mart April Same-Store Sales Beat Views, Others
Follow Trend, published at 8:31 a.m. EDT, misstated which quarter
the company's sales projection was for. The corrected version
follows.)
DOW JONES NEWSWIRES
Wal-Mart Stores Inc. (WMT) smashed analysts' expectations with a
5% jump in April same-store sales as the rest of the industry
followed the trend, posting results higher than analysts' dour
views.
March sales were hurt by Easter moving back to April this year,
and analysts say April sales are likely to benefit from the shift.
Most analysts say they prefer to look at the two months together
for this year and last to get an idea of Easter-season shopping
trends.
But the news wasn't all good from Wal-Mart. The company said it
expects sales for the fiscal first quarter, which ended April 30,
of about $93 billion, below analysts' estimates of $96.82 billion,
according to Thomson Reuters. Still, shares rose 3.6% premarket to
$51.30 on the April results.
The world's largest retailer posted a 5% increase in U.S.
same-store sales last month, excluding gasoline sales, with the
namesake chain posting a 5.9% jump and Sam's Club seeing 0.3%
growth. Analysts had been expecting a 2.9% increase overall.
April's results were driven by the grocery, health and wellness,
hardline, entertainment and home segments, as well as seasonal
merchandise.
Wal-Mart Vice Chairman Eduardo Castro-Wright said the company
gained new customers, boosted its market share and found that when
customers had more money to spend, "they spent it more often at
Wal-Mart."
Rival discounters Costco Wholesale Corp. (COST) and BJ's
Wholesale Club Inc. (BJ) didn't fare as well. Costco posted flat
same-store-sales excluding gasoline and currency fluctuations,
while BJ's said same-store sales fell 4.9%, worse than analysts'
expectations.
Many observers expected same-store sales industrywide last month
to be little changed. But excluding Wal-Mart, separate indexes from
Thomson Reuters and Retail Metrics put the drop at about 3.4%.
The results show the weak state of consumer confidence, which
rose to its highest point of the year at 39.2 in April - back to
the levels seen at the time of investment bank Lehman Brothers'
collapse in September. The indicator was at 62.3 last April.
More retailers have beaten analysts' projections over the last
several months than those that have fallen short, so another
surprise may be possible despite the expected drop.
Among other retailers, Children's Place Retail Stores Inc.
(PLCE) posted a 4% increase in same-store sales, beating analysts'
expectations.
High-flyer Buckle Inc. (BKE) again soared above its peers,
reporting an 18% increase, beating analysts' expectations for an
11% gain. The company has posted double-digit growth in same-store
sales for 21 straight months.
Another teen retailer, Abercrombie & Fitch Co. (ANF) beat
analysts' dire expectations with a 22% drop. The 27% plunge
analysts had projected was the biggest drop seen for any company.
Abercrombie has been steadfast about refusing to cut its prices,
saying such a move would devalue its brand.
Other companies that beat views included department-store Stage
Stores Inc. (SSI) and Gap Inc. (GPS). Department store Macy's Inc.
(M) missed analysts' estimates with a 9.1% drop.
-By Kerry E. Grace, Dow Jones Newswires; 201-938-5089;
kerry.grace@dowjones.com